Eighty Seven ParkA rendering of Eighty Seven Park, which is set to be completed in late 2019.

A $US68 million penthouse in Miami could shatter the state’s real-estate record.

The real-estate record in Florida was set by the sale of a $US60 million penthouse in 2015, according to The Wall Street Journal.

The penthouse at Eighty Seven Park will have more than 18,000 square feet of outdoor space, including two infinity pools.

A penthouse in Miami is set to shatter the state’s real-estate record.

The penthouse at Eighty Seven Park is 25,000 square feet and was designed to offer the resident 360-degree park, city, and ocean views. The building is located in North Beach and is, according to a press release, 80% sold.

The penthouse was designed by architect Renzo Piano, who has designed iconic buildings such as the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris.

According to a press release, the penthouse has 25,000 square feet of space: The more than 12,000 square feet of interior space …

Eighty Seven Park

… is exceeded by only the more than 18,000 square feet of outdoor terrace space.

Eighty Seven Park

It has six bedrooms, three powder rooms …

Eighty Seven Park

… and eight bathrooms.

Eighty Seven Park

The space is also flush with luxury amenities like two private elevators, a personal fitness center, a Jacuzzi, and two summer kitchens.

Eighty Seven Park

The penthouse will be sold exclusively by Douglas Elliman and features floor-to-ceiling windows …

Eighty Seven Park

… which all serve to better take in the ocean views and to “erase any sense of out versus in.”

Eighty Seven Park

The apartment complex is about an hour’s drive north of the most expensive zip code in Florida, Fisher Island, a 126-acre man-made island that’s considered the most millionaire-dense zip code in America.

Eighty Seven Park’s location is both part of its appeal and part of its problem: It offers sweeping views of the ocean, but it’s also less than 30 minutes outside of Miami Beach, one of the many American cities experts predict could be underwater by 2060 because of rising ocean levels.